LATEST POSTS
Love Your Enemy: At the Heart of Christian Theology or Impossible Dream?
Jesus’ teaching about loving our enemies is at once the most radical and the most ignored command in the Bible. Many Christians think this command reflects an unrealistic and idealistic standard, so they figure out ways to dodge it.
Ephesians: A Handbook for Peace Warriors
New Testament scholars describe Paul’s letter to the Ephesians in superlatives: the quintessence of Paul’s theology, the crown of Paulinism and such. It is famous for its teaching on grace, the church and spiritual warfare. But few evangelicals realize that Ephesians is also a handbook for peace warriors.
Peacemaking: Why It's a Really Big Deal
We want to ignite a peace revolution – a peace movement! But peacemaking has gotten a bad reputation with evangelical Christians. Many think that peacemaking is the domain of liberals. Or that people who don’t really believe in the gospel veer into peacemaking instead.
Peacemaking and Sharing the Good News: Odd Couple or Match Made in Heaven?
I was talking about Peace Catalyst at a meeting recently, when a woman exclaimed, “But if people don’t come to Christ, everything else is worthless!” Really? Worthless? Since there are literally millions of Christians like her in the world, I feel compelled to write.
Ergun Caner, Evangelicals, Muslims and the Media: Bearing False Witness
Liberty University recently demoted Ergun Caner from his role as Dean of Liberty Baptist Theological Seminary. “Factual statements that are self-contradictory” regarding his past (especially his purported involvement as a terrorist) were the reasons given for the demotion of this famous Muslim convert to Christ
An Agenda as Great as the Gospel
I am reading for the second time a stimulating book called The Celtic Way of Evangelism by George G. Hunter III. What a movement! These fourth century Christians lived in community, practiced contemplative prayer, engaged in power ministry, emphasized social justice, contextualized their faith, loved creation, valued scholarship, and did all this in the context of obeying Jesus’ command to “make disciples of all nations.